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    Two gene clues for resistance to malaria

    Scientists in Germany and Africa on Wednesday said they had found two variants of genes that help to explain why some lucky individuals do not develop severe malaria.

    The two variants were netted in a comparison of 1,325 people in the West African state of Ghana who had fallen ill with severe falciparum malaria and of 828 counterparts who were otherwise healthy.

    One variant is found in a gene called ATP2B4, they reported in the journal Nature. The gene's function is to help the passage of calcium through the membrane of red blood cells, which are targeted for infection by the malaria parasite.

    The other variant is located near a gene called MARVELD3, controlling a protein on the lining of blood vessels. The gene could play a part in reducing damage that occurs when colonised blood cells stick to tiny blood vessels, according to the research.

    The results of the study, led by Christian Timmann of the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine in Hamburg, Germany, were compared with a similar survey among children in Gambia.

    A fast-growing tool in basic research, genomic comparison entails sifting through the human genetic code and looking for tiny changes that signify why some people are likelier to fall sick from disease and others less so or maybe not at all.

    The goals are to provide diagnostic tools, helping to identify people who are at greater risk, and develop new drugs inspired by the pathways which confer immunity.

    Previous work has found that people with the blood group O have a protection against falciparum malaria, the severest form of the disease.

    People with sickle-cell disorder, in which blood cells with an abnormal sickle shape can trigger anaemia, have also been found to be resistant to malaria.

    In 2010, malaria infected about 216 million people and claimed an estimated 655,000 lives, particularly in Africa and among small children, according to the UN's World Health Organisation (WHO). Other experts say the toll is at least double that estimate.

     

    8 comments

    • Jeanette  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      My cousin almost died from malaria. I don't see what good mosquitos can do. We'd be better off without them. Plenty of other things that will kill people are out there.
    • Garr Obo  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      These a**holes are interfering in God's plan and work. Just like the rindepest which kills off millions of African game animals every year he has put malaria in place to keep the native population down and tse-tse fly to keep natives out of fly-infested areas he has set aside for the animals malaria is necessary to keep the native population at a stable number. Now, with the misplaced idea of pre-natal care and medicines available to these groits the population has exploded and these native women are pumping out a kid every nine months causing famine and the spread of diseases throughout the continent. Best to leave things alone.
      • L K 1 day 21 hrs ago
        The Garr Obo population has exploded and these trolls are pumping out stupid comments every few minutes causing idiocy to spread throughout the internet. Best to eradicate them.
    • Storm  •  2 days 23 hrs ago
      There is a medical study called "Adult mortality and blood feeding behavioral effects of α-amyrin acetate, a novel bioactive compound on in vivo exposed females of Anopheles stephensi Liston (Diptera: Culicidae)." (free on line at PubMed)

      Cutting through the "Sci-Speak", the study comes down to this- when mosquitoes bit guinea pigs that had alpha amyrin (which is found in many types of plants) 76.9% of them were dead within 24 hours. The amyrin also made the mosquitoes less likely to light on you, they hesitated longer before biting and the surviving mosquitoes laid fewer eggs than normal.

      Add an amyrin lotion to the sterile males idea, and we just might end malaria!
    • barbara  •  3 days ago
      new drugs and knowledge are good. i strongly support killing all those mosquitoes by sending sterile males out there.
    • EN  •  3 days ago
      Good news !
    • sonny  •  Manila, Philippines  •  3 days ago
      God is good all the time.......
      • Anonymous Coward 2 days 5 hrs ago
        God is not real. There is a term for people who cannot separate fantasy from reality; insane.

        It's amazing how many mentally-ill people there are.
      • sonny 2 days 5 hrs ago
        why change your name? don't be shy...
      • ken 2 days 7 hrs ago
        All knowing, all powerful, all good. Think about it. "Slay every one...", JOB? God's goodness is different from ours.
    • Winter  •  2 days 5 hrs ago
      Seriously u think God doesn't knw about all that....come on guyz
    • sharon  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  2 days 6 hrs ago
      someday blood work will tell it all